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Linux System Administration: Booting, User Account Management, and Filesystems

Learn about the boot process in Linux, managing user accounts, and working with different filesystem types. Explore topics such as PROM, OS loaders, boot scripts, user account creation/deletion, disk partitioning, and filesystem mounting.

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Linux System Administration: Booting, User Account Management, and Filesystems

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  1. Lecture 13 Linux System Administration

  2. Booting • PROM (BIOS) — perform basic self-test and access parameters from nvram (CMOS) • OS Loader — locate and run kernel on disk • Located in the MBR (first sector of boot device) • May call secondary loader on some partition • LILO, GRUB • Kernel — initializes devices, mounts root filesystem, starts first user process (init)

  3. init • init — reads /etc/inittab to determine what to start according to the run-level(initdefault) run-level

  4. Boot Scripts • /etc/init.d contains scripts for every managed service, e.g. /etc/init.d/sshd {start|stop} • Links to these boot scripts are created in the sequencing directories/etc/rc[0-6].d • Links started with S are called with start • Links started with K are called with stop

  5. Boot Scripts (cont.) • Numbers in link determine the order the script are run, e.g. • S55sshd runs before S80sendmail but after S08iptables • Maintain runlevel information for system services by manipulating files in /etc/rc[0-6].d or use chkconfig

  6. Internet Services Daemon • xinetd — listens to service ports and starts server when a request arrives • No need to start all the daemons at boot time • “Super-server” • Services are configured in /etc/xinetd.conf or in individual files under /etc/xinetd.d

  7. Shutting Down • shutdown brings the system down safely : /sbin/shutdown -t 600 -r “… be right back” • Processes are sent SIGTERM and then SIGKILL • halt same as shutdown -h • reboot same as shutdown -r • poweroff turns off the power after halting (same as halt -p)

  8. User Account Management • Local user info stored in /etc/passwd • To create a new local user : • Add new entry to /etc/passwd and /etc/shadow (and /etc/group is necessary) • Create home directory for the new user with some default startup files • Do these manually or use useradd : useradd -c “Bill Gates” -u 1001 -g msoft -d /home/billg -m -k /etc/skel -s /bin/bash billg

  9. User Acct. Management (cont.) • To delete an account : userdel -r billg • To create a group : groupadd -g 550 web • To delete a group : groupdel web

  10. /etc/passwd • Format of a passwd entry: username:password:uid:gid:gecos:homedir:shell root:x:0:0:root:/root:/bin/bash bin:x:1:1:bin:/bin:/sbin/nologin nobody:x:99:99:Nobody:/:/sbin/nologin billg:x:1001:501:Bill Gates:/home/billg:/bin/bash

  11. /etc/shadow • Format of a shadow entry: username:password:lstchg:min:max:warn:inact:exp: root:j3dghRBqe$2fjvGJ8js:12650:0:99999:7::: bin:*:12650:0:99999:7::: … • * does not match any password • !! account is locked • The shadow file should only be readable by root

  12. Groups • Format of a group entry in /etc/group groupname:password:gid:user_list root::0:root bin::1:root,bin,daemon senate::990:chuck,hillary • Group passwords can be stored in /etc/gshadow • If you belong to more than 1 groups, you can change your group with : newgrp [ group ]

  13. Become Another User • su - run shell as another user • Need password of the user you are su’ing to • No username specified means root • sudo - execute command as another user • Authenticate with your own password • Run command as root by default • sudo privileges are defined in /etc/sudoers

  14. Installation • Install from CD/DVDs interactively • Network automated installation • Kickstart (Red Hat) • Jumpstart (Solaris) • Packages and machine configuration files located on install server • Install a machine with a single command linux ks=nfs:server:/path(RH Linux) boot net - install (Solaris)

  15. Disk Partition • A partition is a logical section of a disk, normally with its own filesystem • The partition table contains the partition information (starting block, size, type) • A disk can be partitioned during OS installation or (for non-system disks) afterwards using fdisk or parted

  16. A Partition Table (parted) print Disk geometry for /dev/hda: 0.000-38146.972 megabytes Disk label type: msdos Minor Start End Type Filesystem Flags 1 0.031 25603.593 primary ntfs boot 2 25603.594 25705.568 primary ext3 3 25705.569 26733.164 primary linux-swap 4 26733.164 38146.530 extended lba 5 26733.195 38146.530 logical ext3

  17. Filesystems • Different filesystem types organize files and directories in different ways • Ext3 — most common filesystem on Linux • Ext3 is a journaling filesystem • Sequence of changes to filesystem treated as single transaction • After unclean system shutdown • Replay journal to make filesystem consistent • No need to fsck

  18. Mounting Filesystems /etc/fstab: LABEL=/ / ext3 defaults 1 1 LABEL=/boot /boot ext3 defaults 1 2 none /proc proc defaults 0 0 /dev/sda2 swap swap defaults 0 0 • mount -a causes all fs in fstab to be mounted • To manually mount a filesystem not in fstab mount -t ext3 -o ro,acl /dev/sda5 /a • To check filesystem usage, use df, e.g. df /usr

  19. Access Control Lists (ACL) • Traditionally, file permissions can only be set for user, group, and everyone • Different perms cannot be used for different users • ACL provides finer access control • Filesystems need to be mounted with the acl option

  20. Setting ACL • To give Prof. Korn rw access to your file that has permission 600: setfacl -m u:kornj:rw somefile • To remove all permission for Prof. Korn: setfacl -x u:kornj somefile • To list the ACL for a file/directory: getfacl somefile

  21. Quota • Prevent one user from using up the whole disk • Disk quota can be configured for individual users as well as groups • To enable quota on a filesystem, mount with usrquota and/or grpquota options

  22. Setting Disk Quota • To list quota for user or group: quota user orquota -g group Disk quotas for user foo (uid: 501): Filesystem blocks soft hard inodes soft hard /dev/sdb2 223652 512000 600000 23456 0 0 • To configure quota for user: edquota user • User can exceed soft limit for a grace period • To configure quota for group: edquota -g group

  23. Swap • Swap space — area on disk for transferring pages to/from physical memory (RAM) • When RAM is (almost) full, RAM pages are saved to swap by the page daemon • Can be a dedicated partition or a swap file • Usually twice the size of RAM • e.g. 2048 MB swap for 1024 MB RAM

  24. RAID • Redundant Array of Independent Disks • Combine multiple smaller physical disks into one big logical disk: OS sees one big drive • Improve I/O performance and provide redundancy • Most common RAID levels • Linear : concatenation • RAID 0 : striping - no redundancy • RAID 1 : mirroring • RAID 5 : striping with distributed-parity (XOR) • RAID 6 : P + Q redundancy - up to 2 disk failure

  25. RAID Level 5 Disk 1 Disk 2 Disk 3 Disk 4 Disk 5 0 1 2 3 P 5 6 7 P 4 10 11 P 8 9 15 P 12 13 14 P 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 P Left-symmetric

  26. Hardware vs. Software RAID • Hardware RAID • RAID controller handles everything • Host sees one big drive • Software RAID • Kernel handles all RAID issues (MD driver) • Cheaper but lower performance • See md(4), mdadm(8)

  27. Network Configuration • Ethernet devices are named eth0, eth1, etc. • To statically configure a network interface: • IP address (128.122.20.123) • Netmask (defines subnet) (255.255.255.0) • Router (gateway) address (128.122.20.1) • ifconfig is used at boot time to configure network interfaces • List configuration if no argument is given

  28. DHCP • Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol • Dynamically allocate IP addresses to clients • Addresses are leased for a certain period • Some older clients use BOOTP

  29. Network File System (NFS) • Developed by Sun Microsystems • Allowed remote filesystems to be mounted locally • e.g. home directory mounted on machines • To mount a filesystem from a NFS server mount -t nfs -o nosuid,intr serv1:/export/local /usr/local

  30. NFS (cont.) NFS client NFS server (serv1) / / usr export via NFS local local mount point for serv1:/export/local bin lib share

  31. Naming and Directory Services • Original UNIX naming system stores info in /etc • Does not scale well for large network • Network naming services • Information stored centrally (client-server model) • Usernames, passwords, hostnames/IP addr, etc. • Binds names to objects • Resolves names to objects • e.g. www.cs.nyu.edu is 128.122.80.245 • DNS, NIS, LDAP

  32. Domain Name System • Distributed, replicated service for translating hostnames to IP addresses • Namespace divided into hierarchy of domains • Each DNS domain supported by 2 or more name servers

  33. DNS Namespace root • gov com org edu nyu usc

  34. DNS Client • The resolver (e.g. gethostbyname()) on the client queries the name server • DNS servers in /etc/resolv.conf, e.g. nameserver 128.122.128.2 • Query DNS server interactively with nslookup or dig

  35. Network Information Service • Developed by Sun Microsystems - originally Yellow Pages (yp) • Stores network, hostnames-addresses, users, and network services info in NIS maps • e.g. passwd.byname, passwd.byuid, hosts.byname, ethers.byaddr, netgroup, etc. • Client-server model • Servers are replicated (master/slave) • NIS+ — similar to NIS, but more features and more secure

  36. LDAP • Lightweight Directory Access Protocol • Specialized database optimized for reading and searching • What can be stored in LDAP? • Passwords, phone numbers, date-of-birth, jpeg photos, • Client-server model (again) • LDAP directory service is global • OpenLDAP is an open source implementation

  37. LDAP Information Model • A LDAP entry is a collection of attributes with a unique Distinguished Name (DN) uid=jane,ou=People,dc=cims,dc=nyu,dc=edu • Each attribute has a type and one or more values telephoneNumber: 212-995-1234 • The values of the objectClass attributes decide what attributes are required/allowed objectClass: posixAccount • objectClasses are defined in schema

  38. Directory Information Tree • Entries are arranged in a hierarchical structure dc=com dc=edu dc=nyu organization dc=cims ou=People ou=Hosts organizational unit uid=jane person

  39. Accessing LDAP • Add, modify, and delete entries with ldapadd, ldapmodify, and ldapdelete • Search the LDAP database with ldapsearch • Bind as some DN or anonymously ldapsearch -D “cn=Directory Manager” -h ldaphost -b “dc=cims,dc=nyu,dc=edu” “uidNumber=9876” gecos • Access to information is controlled by an access control list, e.g. password hashes are not available through anonymous bind

  40. Name Service Switch • Controls how a machine obtains network information, such as passwd, group, aliases, hosts, netmasks, etc. • Config file: /etc/nsswitch.conf • Sample entries: passwd: files ldap hosts: files ldap dns netmasks: files

  41. Controlling Access to Services • Firewall • Packet filtering • Software vs. hardware • TCP Wrapper (IP address) • Application • Host-based (IP address, certificates) • User-based (Password) • Don’t start the daemons

  42. Software Firewall (iptables) • Configure tables of packet-filter rules in Linux kernel • Each table has a number of chains • Each chain consists of a list of rules • Each rule specifies what to do with a matching packet • The default table (filter) has 3 built-in chains: • INPUT incoming packets • FORWARD routed packets • OUTPUT outgoing packets

  43. iptables (cont.) • Rules activated at boot time is defined in /etc/sysconfig/iptables • Sample iptables entry: -A INPUT -m state --state NEW -m tcp -p tcp -s 192.168.1.0/24 --d port 137 -j ACCEPT • Allows new TCP connections from hosts in the 192.168.1.0/24 network to port 137

  44. TCP Wrapper • tcpd logs and controls incoming requests for services such as telnet, finger, rsh, etc. • inetd runs tcpd instead • tcpd logs connection and checks if connection is allowed based on hosts.allow and hosts.deny • /etc/hosts.allow: in.telnetd: .cs.nyu.edu,.cs.cuny.edu • /etc/hosts.deny: ALL: ALL

  45. PAM • Pluggable Authentication Module • Centralized authentication mechanism • “Plug in” different authentication methods • Different services can have different authentication policies • Highly secure systems can require multiple passwords to authenticate

  46. PAM Framework Applications ftp login ssh PAM Library libpam conf Modules pam_unix pam_ldap pam_securetty

  47. PAM Stack • Modules are stacked (order is important) • Sample PAM configuration in /etc/pam.d: interface control flag module name auth required pam_nologin.so auth required pam_securetty.so auth sufficient pam_unix.so auth required pam_ldap.so

  48. Date, Time, and NTP • Date sets the system date and time: date MMDDhhmm[[CC]YY][.ss] • Some applications can fail if clocks are not synchronized among machines, e.g. make • Use Network Time Protocol (NTP) • A stratum 1 server is connected to a reference clock • Stratum 2 servers synchronize with stratum1 servers • Your machine synchronized with stratum 2+ servers • Daemon: ntpd Config file: /etc/ntp.conf

  49. Mail • Mail Transfer Agent (MTA) • Sendmail • Postfix • Qmail • Incoming mail are deposited into /var/mail or forwarded to another address according to the aliases (/etc/aliases) or user’s .forward

  50. Spam Control • Spam filters in MTA or MUA • Authentication • Microsoft’s Sender-ID • Outgoing mail servers for each domain published in DNS • Incoming mail checked against the list • Yahoo’s DomainKeys • Header contains signature of message • Recipient looks up sender’s published validation key in DNS and checks signature • Legislation

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